Figure Out: Catastrophe or Regeneration by Paolo Porelli is on view at the Holter Museum of Art, Helena
July 28 – September 29, 2023
“Figure Out” is the most recent project produced in the United States by Italian artist Paolo Porelli in two residency periods, at Arch Contemporary in Tiverton, Rhode Island in 2018, and at The Clay Studio of Philadelphia in 2022. At the Holter Museum, Porelli presents a sculptural group of about 60 ceramic “figurines” that reveal a great deal about the reality of the times in which we live but that are cognisant of how to go beyond and enter the timeless dimension of myth and archetype. The title “Figure Out” plays with the word “figure” and its significance of “representing”, “understanding”, but also with the way in which the figures in the installation come out of the wall to offer themselves to the viewer.
Catastrophe or regeneration is the crossroads at which we find ourselves as inhabitants of a world that we are transforming and driving to the brink of an ecological apocalypse that could either have catastrophic effects or could virtuously reverse the degenerative process and launch a new regenerative phase that could bring humanity back towards more sustainable goals for mankind and nature.
The sculptures originate from a 3D model that was replicated by slip-casting. Each stereotype has undergone a process of expressive transformation which personalizes the serial figure into a new individual subject. Chromatically, an extensive colour palette was utilised, demonstrating all the aesthetic possibilities of ceramics.
The figures on display convey two parallel meanings that belong to antithetical but complementary symbolic categories. One part represents the phenomena which, due to their excess, are leading to catastrophe: production, consumption, raw materials, profit, quantity, combustion. Personifications of regeneration appear in the other part: natural phenomena, biological dynamics, organic matter, plant forms, fertility, humidity. As in the cosmic balance, destructive and generating forces co-exist, just as in traditional, ancient representations of archaic divinities of all the civilizations of the world.
The figurines attempt to represent the variety of human behaviour, traversing opposite poles of existence. In the natural order of things, there are complementary opposing forces, some generating and others destructive. This concept is at the very foundation of life but there must be a balance. One must not prevail over the other. The impact of human activity on nature is reaching the limit of sustainability and potentially creating an irreversible imbalance. Will there be a catastrophe, or will we be able to initiate a regeneration? This is the question that concerns each of us and that none of us can ignore.
Holter Museum of Art
12 E. Lawrence St.
Helena, MT 59601
United States